Book Image

Mastering OpenStack - Second Edition

By : Omar Khedher, Chandan Dutta
Book Image

Mastering OpenStack - Second Edition

By: Omar Khedher, Chandan Dutta

Overview of this book

In this second edition, you will get to grips with the latest features of OpenStack. Starting with an overview of the OpenStack architecture, you'll see how to adopt the DevOps style of automation while deploying and operating in an OpenStack environment. We'll show you how to create your own OpenStack private cloud. Then you'll learn about various hypervisors and container technology supported by OpenStack. You'll get an understanding about the segregation of compute nodes based on reliability and availability needs. We'll cover various storage types in OpenStack and advanced networking aspects such as SDN and NFV. Next, you'll understand the OpenStack infrastructure from a cloud user point of view. Moving on, you'll develop troubleshooting skills, and get a comprehensive understanding of services such as high availability and failover in OpenStack. Finally, you will gain experience of running a centralized logging server and monitoring OpenStack services. The book will show you how to carry out performance tuning based on OpenStack service logs. You will be able to master OpenStack benchmarking and performance tuning. By the end of the book, you'll be ready to take steps to deploy and manage an OpenStack cloud with the latest open source technologies.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Using block storage service: Cinder

Cinder provides persistent storage management for the virtual machine's hard drives. Unlike ephemeral storage, virtual machines backed by Cinder volumes can be easily live-migrated and evacuated. In prior OpenStack releases, block storage was a part of the compute service in OpenStack nova-volume. Within its overwhelmed new features, block storage service has been evolved and taken a separate spot in the OpenStack ecosystem so renamed as Cinder. Under the hood, volumes expose a raw block of storage that can be attached to instances and can store data permanently. The attached volume appears as an additional hard-drive within the virtual machine. To use the attached volume within a virtual machine, it must be first partitioned and laid with a filesystem and mounted on to the filesystem hierarchy on the virtual machine.

Cinder uses iSCSI, NFS, and fiber channels to present...